Palin comes across as particularly upset about being stuck with $50,000 in legal bills that she says were directly related to the legal vetting process for the VP slot. She says she was never informed that she would have to personally take care of expenses related to the selection process, and jokes that if she'd known she was going to get stuck with the bill, she would have given shorter responses.What a clusterfuck it must be to try to work with her.
According to the book, Palin asked officials at the Republican National Committee and what was left of the McCain campaign if they would help her financially. She says she was told that if McCain had won, the bills would have been paid, but since he lost, the bills were her responsibility.
Trevor Potter, the McCain campaign's general counsel, told the AP the campaign never asked Palin to pay a legal bill.
"To my knowledge, the campaign never billed Gov. Palin for any legal expenses related to her vetting and I am not aware of her ever asking the campaign to pay legal expenses that her own lawyers incurred for the vetting process," Potter said.
If Palin's lawyer billed her for work related to her vetting, the McCain campaign never knew about it, Potter said.
13 November 2009
An early summary of the Palin book
The AP purchases and reads "Sarah Palin's" memoir, Going Rogue: An American Life, so you don't have to. Here's one he-said, she-said issue from the book:
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politics
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